Village Voices Chorale "Holiday Joy" Concert in Westlake Village December 3-4

Welcome in the holiday season with The Village Voices Chorale’s heart-warming concert Here We Come A'Caroling on Friday, December 3 at 8 pm and Saturday, December 4 at 2:30 pm at the United Methodist Church, 1049 S. Westlake Blvd, Westlake Village.

Reminisce with traditional carols like "Carol of the Bells", the fun-loving "Little Saint Nick" and the haunting refrains of S'Vivon, a Chanukah favorite. To purchase tickets, visit villagevoices.org ($20 for advance purchases and $25 at the door).

For questions, call 818-383-0903.

For your health and safety, protocols will be in effect, according to current public health guidance and law. Be prepared to show ID with proof of vaccination or negative PCR test and to practice proper masking.

Halloween Weekend Events at the Simi Valley Town Center, October 30-31, 2021

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The Simi Valley Town Center is hosting a weekend of fun Halloween activities on October 30-31, 2021. The schedule is as follows:

Saturday, October 30th

  • 9am-4pm: Street Fair

  • 5-7pm: Inside Mall Trick or Treat

  • 7-10pm: Live concert featuring Captain Cardiac and the Coronaries

  • Free all day: Kids Zone / Bounce Houses

Sunday, October 31st

  • 4-6pm: Trunk or Treat

  • Free all day: Kids Zone / Bounce Houses

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"Concert for the Cats" Benefit for America's Teaching Zoo in Moorpark on September 10th

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Moorpark College is partnering with Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter John Ondrasik to host the “Concert for the Cats” benefit at 5 p.m. on Sept. 10. Proceeds from the concert will assist in the completion of America’s Teaching Zoo’s Tiger Retreat Habitat for Bengal tigers Neil and Karma.

Ondrasik, who’s known as Five for Fighting, and his wife, Carla, have hosted multiple charity concerts in the community and proposed to also host this benefit concert. Their son attends Moorpark College.

“Our family spends many Saturdays visiting Ira the lion and saying hello to his other animal friends and the amazing students and faculty. I can’t be more excited to support the wonderful Moorpark zoo,” said Ondrasik, who grew up in the San Fernando Valley. “I look forward to raising some needed funds for the zoo with songs and stories and listening to fantastic Moorpark College singer-songwriting students!”

When tigers Neil and Karma came to the zoo in 2017, they were each around 50 pounds. Today, Neil weighs 375 pounds, and Karma weighs 275, said Zoo Development Coordinator Mara Rodriguez.

“They need a larger enclosure, and the community can have a part in it by coming to the concert,” said Rodriguez. “Concertgoers will be bringing this project to the finish line. The new exhibit will include two sections for Neil and Karma with a connecting bridge that zoo visitors will be able to walk under.”

Neil was rescued as a 4-month-old cub from a private residence in the Hollywood Hills after being spotted in a popular YouTuber’s video. The cub was sent to America’s Teaching Zoo at Moorpark College to live and rehabilitate with his companion Karma, who was donated by another zoo.

In 2001, Ondrasik was nominated for a Grammy Award in the category of best pop performance by a duo or group with vocal for “Superman (It’s Not Easy).” His standard “100 Years” went double platinum. He is developing a musical series for ABC with Broadway composer Stephen Schwartz, as well as working on various television and musical theater projects that he has sold.

Moorpark College Music department students will open the show at 5 p.m. in the Moorpark College Campus Quad, 7075 Campus Road, Moorpark. The college’s theater students are providing production assistance.

VIP tickets for the fundraiser are $125 and include an exclusive pre-show photo-op meet-and-greet with Ondrasik at 4:30 p.m., a tour of America’s Teaching Zoo with animal interactions, refreshments and reserved seating for the concert.

General admission tickets are $65, with seating provided. Lawn seating is $55; attendees are welcome to bring blankets or low beach chairs. Alumni tickets with seats are $50, using an email discount code sent to alumni. Tickets are $25 for VCCCD students with a campus ID and children (15 and under).

Handicap seating will be available, and local food trucks will have food for purchase.

Tickets can be purchased through the America’s Teaching Zoo ticket office website at THIS LINK.

For more information about Moorpark College’s America’s Teaching Zoo, visit zoo.moorparkcollege.edu.

2021 Summer Concert Series at the Simi Valley Town Center Through September

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The Simi Valley Town Center is hosting a free Summer Concert Series on Friday and Saturday nights through September. Here’s the lineup:

Fri 7/30 7pm - Mighty Cash Cats - Center Court

Fri 8/6 7pm: Tommy Peacock Band - East Court

Sat 8/7 7pm: Pretzel Logic (Steely Dan Revue) - Center Court and Harmony 101 at Koi Pond

Fri 8/13 7pm: 805 Social Club - Center Court

Sat 8/14 7pm: Bad Habit - Center Court and The Revolving Doors - Koi Pond

Fri 8/20 6pm: Honky Tonk Outlaws - East Court

Sat 8/21 7pm: Black Dragon & Wired - Center Court, Blue Motel Room - East Court and Studebaker Hawk - Koi Pond

Fri 8/27 7pm - Wicked Sabbath - East Court

Sat 8/28 7pm: Reign - Center Court and On Tap - Koi Pond

Fri 9/3 7pm: Doc Rogers Band - East Court

Sat 9/4 7pm: Captain Cardiac and the Coronaries - Center Court and Honky Tonk Outlaws - Koi Pond

Fri 9/10 7pm: Just Dave Band - East Court

Sat 9/11 7pm: Blue Motel Room - East Court and Ready or Not - Koi Pond

Fri 9/17 7pm: Honky Tonk Outlaws - East Court

Sat 9/18 7pm: Natalie Wattre - East Court and The Balance - Koi Pond

Fri 9/24 7pm: Doc Rogers Band - East Court

Sat 9/25 7pm: Journey USA - Center Court

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Simi Valley Town Center is located at 1555 Simi Town Center Way.

Live Entertainment at the Los Robles Gardens in Thousand Oaks in May, June

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Join us for LIVE Entertainment at the Los Robles Gardens!

Thousand Oaks Alliance for the Arts is pleased to offer live entertainment at the Los Robles Gardens this spring and summer!

TOArts’ Scene at the Greens will present live shows at Los Robles Gardens featuring a diverse line up of entertainment to satisfy all tastes. Events are all outdoors and will be sold in pod seating to allow for social distancing.

Ilya Serov & Friends: An Evening of Jazz will open the series with two shows, May 8th at 4pm & 8pm. Los Angeles-based trumpeter/singer/band leader Serov has a passion for jazz. A talented young musician, he brings an infusion of imagination, vision and energy to America’s musical art form.

On May 28 at 7:30pm, New West Symphony Trio brings their Global Sounds and Local Cultures to the Gardens featuring tangos by Piazzolla, Porgy & Bess by Gershwin and Russian Dance by Tchaikovsky, as well as Gypsy Romanian virtuosic violin pyrotechnics from a passionate and talented piano trio.

Closing the series will be local stand up comedian Craig Shoemaker on June 10 at 7:30pm. Shoemakers diverse talents, story-telling chops, and multi-dimensional ability to entertain in an amusing and relevant way is one act you do not want to miss!

All shows are outdoors, so please dress accordingly. All shows are sold separately, and space is very limited.

All patrons are required to wear a face covering unless actively eating or drinking. This event has restricted pod seating to offer social distancing. Please maintain 6 feet social distance at all times. Everyone entering the venue is required to have a paid ticket. Patrons must comply with restrictions and directions from event personnel or may be asked to leave. Due to present circumstances surrounding COVID-19, the event status is subject to change.

Tickets are on sale now and range between $65-$30. Tickets are available from Ticketmaster www.ticketmaster.com. For more information visit www.bapacthousandoaks.com

New West Symphony Presents "Duet of Remembrance" February 29 and March 1

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Mendelssohn, Shakespeare, and a historic children’s opera

Saturday, February 29 | 7:30 PM | Thousand Oaks

Sunday, March 1 | 3:00 PM | Camarillo

At its next concert, New West Symphony is performing two of the most influential and powerful works of art - and you don't want to miss it.

Felix Mendelssohn's A Midsummer Night's Dream gave us the unforgettable Wedding March.

And Brundibár inspired hope in a generation of Czech Jews during a dark era of human history.

Mendelssohn reimagines Shakespeare

William Shakespeare wrote a play around 1596 called A Midsummer Night's Dream, a comedy involving eloping lovers, fairies, a magical flower love potion, a wedding, and a guy whose head gets turned into a donkey. In 1827, a German teenager named Felix Mendelssohn was so inspired by it that he wrote an incredible piece of music he titled the Overture to A Midsummer Night's Dream.

Usually an overture is the first piece of music in a full-length opera. By this time Felix had already written five operas -- no big deal for a 17-year-old, of course. LEARN MORE

Brundibár, the children's opera that survived the Holocaust

In 1944 the Nazis fooled the world. When Red Cross inspectors came to visit the Theresienstadt concentration camp, it looked like a peaceful and happy little town for Jewish people. The inspectors had no idea what life in the camp was really like.

In this strange "transitional" camp people starved, died of disease, and disappeared suddenly - but they were also allowed to have music. Orchestras, music lessons, and even jazz performances happened in the camp.

Most popular of all was a children's opera named Brundibár. Everybody wanted to see it, tickets were sold out, and it had a hidden anti-Nazi message. LEARN MORE

See it before it’s gone

Don't miss your chance to see both masterpieces live and in person at New West Symphony's next concert, with actors from Kingsmen Shakespeare Company and the Los Robles Children's Choir!

February 29 in Thousand Oaks and March 1 in Camarillo! Tickets start at $30 at newwestsymphony.org/dreams.


New West Symphony "Happy 250th Ludwig!" Concert in Thousand Oaks, Camarillo, January 25, 26

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New West Symphony celebrates the Ludwig whose music ignites a fire of emotion, today as ever before. The lovely and fiercely talented Eroica Trio performs Beethoven’s “Triple Concerto” for cello, piano, and violin with the orchestra. Plus, you’ll hear the fiery, iconic Symphony No. 3, known as the “Eroica” Symphony.

Even though Beethoven wrote the Triple Concerto and his Third Symphony practically at the same time, it’s almost impossible to find two works by the same composer more opposite in spirit, style, scope and impact.

Triple Concerto for Piano, Cello, Violin and Orchestra

By Beethoven’s time, concertos for multiple instruments were out of style, far more common in the bygone Baroque era, and the Triple Concerto was the only piece that he wrote for more than one soloist. Whereas the Eroica Symphony burns with drama and fury, the Triple Concerto is far less tense, overflowing with light lovely melodies and playful dialogue between the trio instruments.

Symphony No. 3 “Eroica”

Beethoven originally dedicated his Third Symphony to Napoleon Bonaparte, but when the conqueror declared himself Emperor of France, Beethoven tore up the symphony’s title page in a fit of rage. With this groundbreaking symphony, he divided audiences for years and made transitions between such varied styles and moods seem natural, even obvious. As a composer, Beethoven straddled the line between the elegant Classical style he mastered and the bold Romanticism he pioneered.

Saturday, January 25, 2020 | 7:30 PM | Bank of America PAC, Thousand Oaks

Sunday, January 26, 2020 | 3:00 PM | Rancho Campana PAC, Camarillo

Tickets start at $30 at newwestsymphony.org/happy-250th-ludwig

Los Robles Master Chorale Holiday Concert "A Joyful Noise" in Westlake Village on December 8, 2019

Los Robles Master Chorale's 70-voice ensemble will present its annual holiday concert, A Joyful Noise, on December 8 at 4:00 pm. Featured will be breathtaking traditional classics as well as contemporary arrangements of holiday favorites in the swinging style of the popular vocal group, Pentatonix, accompanied by jazz quartet. Tickets are available in advance at www.losroblesmasterchorale.org and are priced at $30 adults, $25 seniors (65+), $15 students (18 and under), and $5 children (12 and under). Additional $5 per ticket charged at door. Further information is available by calling 805-526-SING (7464).

The concert will take place at the Westlake High School Carpenter Family Theatre, 100 Lakeview Canyon Road on Sunday, December 8, 2019 from 4-6pm.

Christmas Concert in the Park, The Nativity, in Camarillo on Sunday, December 14, 2019

Come celebrate the Christmas season with Camarillo’s 2nd Annual Christmas Concert in the Park, The Nativity! This event will feature over 300 performers of all ages including professional soloists, violinists, bagpipes, a jazz band, a drum line and choirs made up of children, youth and adults. Admission is free. Bundle up, bring your chairs and blankets, and share the joy of Christmas at this magical 1 hour event.

Event to take place on Sunday, December 14, 2019 at 5:30 pm, Constitution Park 1437 Paseo Camarillo, Camarillo. More information at camarillonativity.org


New West Symphony "Northern Lights" Concert March 2-3 in Thousand Oaks, Oxnard

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Northern Lights

Sir Edward Elgar’s Cello Concerto was his final major work. Written in 1919 at the end of World War I, the Concerto was Elgar’s lament for a lost world following the devastation of the war. Julie Albers, principal cello of the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, makes her New West Symphony debut with this most eloquent and passionate work. The 1st Symphony of Jean Sibelius was an immediate success following its premiere in 1900. Full of sweeping melodic invention, rhythmic vitality and imbued with the aura of his Finnish homeland, the symphony launched Sibelius’s career on the international stage.

Performances at the Thousand Oaks Civic Arts Plaza on Saturday, March 2, 2019 at 7:30pm and the Oxnard Performing Arts Center on Sunday, March 3, 2019 at 3pm. Buy tickets at www.newwestsymphony.org/cvg.

Andrew Constantine, guest conductor
Julie Albers, cello

Elgar | Sospiri
Elgar | Cello Concerto in E minor
Sibelius | Symphony No. 1

Julie Albers, cello

American cellist Julie Albers is recognized for her superlative artistry, her charismatic and radiant performing style, and her intense musicianship. She was born into a musical family in Longmont, Colorado and began violin studies at the age of two with her mother, switching to cello at four. She moved to Cleveland during her junior year of high school to pursue studies through the Young Artist Program at the Cleveland Institute of Music, where she studied with Richard Aaron. Miss Albers soon was awarded the Grand Prize at the XIII International Competition for Young Musicians in Douai, France, and as a result toured France as soloist with Orchestre Symphonique de Douai.

Andrew Constantine, guest conductor

Andrew Constantine serves as Music Director of both the Fort Wayne Philharmonic and the Reading Symphony Orchestra.

Having gained a reputation in Europe and the UK as a conductor of great skill, charisma, energy and versatility, Andrew Constantine moved to the US in 2004 to become Assistant Conductor of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra. Within his first season there he was promoted to Associate Conductor.

In the US he has won great praise for his ability to communicate with audiences and his energetic and compelling advocacy for classical music have gained him many admirers. In May of 2007, following a two year search and a pool of over 280 applicants, he was appointed Music Director of the Reading Symphony Orchestra in Pennsylvania. In July of 2009, after a similar process, he was also appointed Music Director of the Fort Wayne Philharmonic in Indiana.